WE, One hundred seven years offeditorizalfreedom rn rws: 76-DAILY Ivertising: 764-0554 Thursday March 12, 1998 {..r Y . , , w .' .cv..:..::i^ ..,if. :., rn Y .om 4 . ..r:. . }..;. V r , e;: .,r.. :.. :..: iS .u ti.S '.. ):'. " "." nbA ~ M .5-, M'Nike does pnzed y Japanese I Traveling shoe dealer says special- dition 1985 Dunks even outsell iodels featuring Michael Jordan v Joshua Rosenblatt fily Staff Reporter here in the world does Michigan basketball consistently at out basketball superstar Michael Jordan? It happens all e time in the land of the rising sun, says Steven Parker. Parker, a traveling shoe salesperson who has been selling ed shoes in Japan for a decade, claims there is no shoe that Its as well as the 1985 Michigan Nike Dunk basketball oe. Selling for between $1,000-$2,000 a pair, the maize id blue Dunk exceeds even Nike's Air Jordan shoes in terms demand. "The Dunks are the best shoe right now," said Parker, Iding that he's never had an averaged size shoe that he dn't sell for a good price. .nd Michigan victories in this weekend's NCAA asketball Tournament could drive shoe prices up even high- 'If (the tournament) is well advertised overseas and (the lichigan players) do really well," Parker said, it is definitely >ssible for prices to increase. The popularity of the shoes overseas shows that Michigan ver isn't limited to the United States, said Engineering first- ar student Pat Marsac. "It proves that collegiate athletics are looked at world- 2" Marsac said. The people who buy the shoes in Japan ably watch Michigan sports." Parker said the appeal is not just that the shoes are com- rtable or well made, but they represent American culture. istead of buying cars, many Japanese citizens spend their oney on high-priced shoes, he said. "Why?" asked LSA sophomore Lewis Jones. "I paid $150 r a pair (of shoes) before, but I think that's too much." Parker began selling shoes about 10 years ago when he w an advertisement offering more than $200 for a pair of foes to be resold in Japan. rker owned the shoes and because he was planning to Japan, he decided to see how much money he could t for the shoes. When he found a store that sold used oes, he offered his pair, and after some negotiating, alked out with $400. Since then, he has established a ient base of 12 such retailers. See SHOES, Page 8A Tourney _... may decide coach's By JamesGoldstEin right. L Daily Sports Writer finished ATLANTA - Brian Ellerbe was lost six only named the interim coach of the not invit Michigan men's basketball team this for a sp past October. But success at this week- Tournar end's NCAA Tournament could take first-rot the word interim out of his title. Davidso After succeeding former coach Steve Dome. Fisher - the players' mentor and friend "Hec - Ellerbe had a tough task ahead of him. He could have taken the ;x Wolverines in many direc- tions. Often, new coaches will make drastic changes - wipe the slate clean and fill it with their own coach- ing philosophy. But Ellerbe has made few major we knov changes in Michigan's 24-8 season, and Late if last weekend was any indication, abouti good things are in Ellerbe's forecast. ride a After capturing the first-ever Big Ten tomorr Tournament title, Michigan garnered a attemp No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Tourna And, despite his contention to the after lo contrary, Brian Ellerbe deserves much 1995 ar of the credit for the success, according The to some of the players. focused "Coach Ellerbe came here and did a Michiga great job under tough circumstances," the Big said Michigan co-captain Travis able pla Conlan. "He could have come in and ever ga switched up a lot of things that said tha would've made him look better because NCAA that's how he knew how to coach." change, It's what the 34-year-old Ellerbe has "Con kept the same that might be his best us aga coaching move of the season. "There' Apparently, Ellerbe is doing something fate ast year, the Wolverines, who dthe regular season 19-1 I but of their last nine games, were ted to NCAAs, and had to settle pot in the National Invitational ment. This year, Michigan has a und date with .No. 14 seed on tomorrow at the Georgia came here and kept everything pretty much the same," Conlan said. "Because of the guys that were already here -the nucleus we had-and he took it upon himself to sacrifice for us. I think that's the biggest thing that every- one's overlooked, is that he came here and let us do what w how to do." ly, what Michigan knows is winning. The Wolverines six-game win streak into ow's game. Michigan will t to win its first NCAA ment game in four years, sing in the first round in both nd 1996. Michigan players remain as as they've been all season. an center Robert Traylor, named Ten Tournament's most valu- ayer, will be playing in his first- me in the Big Dance. Traylor at despite a season marked by scrutiny and a coaching the team has gelled. ning into this season, we said it's inst the world," Traylor said. s not one guy on this team who See NCAA, Page SA MARGARET MYERS/Daily Michigan men's basketball coach Brian Ellerbe steps off a bus in Atlanta yesterday. Michigan will play Davidson tomorrow in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.. Nation's colleges question student fees By Christine M. Paik Daily Staff Reporter With the issue of mandatory student fees appearing on election ballots and sparking lawsuits, students on college campuses are speaking out about the way their student governments are spending their money. Students at the University of Michigan will be able to choose whether or not to allocate up to $5 per semester for the next three semesters to the Michigan Student Assembly on an MSA election ballot referendum next Wednesday and Thursday. But students at the University of Minnesota's Twin Cities campus are taking the issue even further. Five stu- dents have sued their university on the basis that mandatory student activity fees are unconstitutional because they force students to fund groups that sup- port causes in which students may not believe. MSA currently charges students $4.96 per semester to fund about 800 student groups, which is less than half of the nearly $12 semester- ly fee Minnesota students pay to fund 36 of the university's student groups. On Feb. 3, Jordan Lorence, legal counsel for North Star Legal Counsel in Fairfax, Va., sued Minnesota on behalf of the "conservative, right- wing" students, Lorence said, who disagree with the allocation of part of MS A M .c Ra n ihs Student fees Meet the candidates Candidates for MSA will be on the Diag from 12 p.m. today to meet with students. their fee to the Queer Student Cultural Center, University Young Women and La Raza Student Cultural Center, which advocate homosexuali- ty, abortion and communism, respec- tively. "What we want is that the university will not require students to fund groups against their will," Lorence said. "This is a matter of conscience for these stu- dents and the university is not respect- ing that." Lorence, who represented a group of students in a similar case at the University of Wisconsin at Madison in Nov. of 1996, said he was approached last year by Minnesota student Matt Curry after he won the case in the federal district court. "There should be an option for stu- dents not to fund certain organizations if they disagree with them," said Curry, a Minnesota senior. "Students should not have to pay for student groups with which they have ideological, religious or political differences." Minnesota General Counsel Mark Rotenberg said the university takes See BALLOT, Page 8A EMILY NATHAN/Daily stern Michigan University marketing writer Doug Bentley gets his copy of "How e Die" signed by author Sherwin Nuland at the Ford Auditorium in University spitals yesterday. ale prof. lectures on e e 0 sisted suicide book Lee Palmer Nuland's presentation emphasized aily Staff Reporter the need for public discussion of com- In a lecture on euthanasia, Sherwin plicated issues regarding death and uland traced the history of physician- dying, as well as the danger of the pro- sisted suicide yesterday in front of a posed state legislation. a than 100 people in the Ford Doctor-assisted suicide should not be torium of the University Hospitals. legislated before citizens and the med- Nuland, the best-selling author of ical community can discuss the issue, ow We Die" and a clinical professor of Nuland said. fgery at Yale University, spoke at a crit- "There will never be a consensus al time, as the state House of on this issue, but continued public epresentatives is scheduled to decide debate will result in an increased tol- Seniors prep for departure a t g ra d fa irtthlflo 1),il Staff Reporter Becoming a member of the Alumni Association has not crossed the minds of many students. But with graduation less than two months away, it is on the to-do lists of many seniors. Ordering announcements, inquiring about com- mencement tickets and purchasing a class ring are on that same list - not to mention the little details, such as choosing a framing style for diplomas and a photo package for the commencement ceremony. The Graduation Fair gives seniors the chance to check all of these things off of their lists in one trip. The second annual Graduation Fair, sponsored by the Michigan Union Bookstore, started today on the ground floor of the Union. Different departments and groups set-up booths together so that seniors would have all the information they need in one area. DANA LINNANE/Daily Business student Kyle Un picks out his class ring at the Graduation Fair sponsored by the Michigan Union I I